1 / 28

Introduction to World Religions

Introduction to World Religions. The Study of Religion. Not simply about faith or belief Involves politics, history, philosophy, sociology, anthropology, art, and literature Use humanities to fully understand a religion vs. study of science, with factual data. Why Study Religion?.

kasen
Download Presentation

Introduction to World Religions

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Introduction to World Religions

  2. The Study of Religion • Not simply about faith or belief • Involves politics, history, philosophy, sociology, anthropology, art, and literature • Use humanities to fully understand a religion • vs. study of science, with factual data

  3. Why Study Religion? • To read to learn, to think critically, and to express yourself persuasively • Liberal Arts degrees are highly valued by employers • Useful in fields like law, medicine, politics, international affairs, and journalism  

  4. Components of Religion

  5. Symbol • Symbol: something used to represent something else • Intended to life us out of daily life and point us to something else • Revered by followers as something powerful

  6. Myth • Myth: story told & retold about the past to express certain values • NOT the opposite of fact • Often contain symbols to make the stories relevant to life, or they explain the symbols

  7. Ritual • Ritual: prescribed, formalized actions that dramatize religious symbols • Make religion relevant to daily life • Repeated in order to establish or keep a connection to the religion • Usually performed in a sacred space • Often explained or reenacted in myths • Often use symbols • Magic attempts to manipulate spiritual forces • Rituals worship spiritual forces

  8. Example Each Sunday (___), Roman Catholics attend Mass (___) in a church (___). Just before the priest gives a small wafer (___) to devout participants, he retells the story (___) of Jesus’ last supper with his disciples. This explains the origin of the ritual and the importance of the symbol: the bread represents the body of Christ.

  9. Doctrine • Doctrine: statements about the deity/ies (God/s), sin, salvation, afterlife, etc. • Cannot be “proven” but is taken as right by followers

  10. God or Gods? • Deity: from the Latin “deus” • Monotheism • Polytheism • Animism: spirits are in everything • Atheism: no deities exist • Agnosticism: God’s existence is not provable, we should doubt, can never know for sure

  11. The Nature of God • Omnipresent: present everywhere at the same time • Omniscient: all knowing; capable of having infinite awareness, understanding, and insight • Worship: reverent love and devotion towards a deity, an idol, or a sacred object

  12. Sacred • That which is holy, ultimately relevant, more significant than reality, purer, deserving proper handling • Opposite is profane • Secular is the opposite of religious

  13. Scripture • Sacred writings • Each modern religion has a canon: official list of scriptures

  14. A Few More Helpful Terms… • Metaphysics: branch of philosophy that studies the ultimate structure and constitution of reality • Does God exist? • Do we have free will? • What is the meaning of life? • Good vs. Evil

  15. Continued • Ascetic: describes a lifestyle characterized by self-denial, abstinence from various worldly pleasures in order to pursue religious and spiritual goals • Denial of sensual pleasures and the accumulation of material wealth • Not a rejection of the enjoyment of life, but to pursue physical and metaphysical health

  16. BC vs. BCE • BCE/CE: Before Common Era/Common Era • Replaces BC/AD • khklhjkl

  17. Middle Eastern Religions: Christianity Roman Catholicism Protestantism Eastern Orthodox Church Islam Shi’ite Sunni Judaism Zoroastrianism Far Eastern Religions: Confucianism Taoism Shinto Mahayana Buddhism Indian Religions: Hinduism Sikhism Jainism Theravada Buddhism African Religions: Tribal Religions of Sub-Saharan Africa American Religions: Religions of Indigenous American Indians Oceanic Religions: The religions of the Pacific Islanders The beliefs of the Aborigines of Australia The beliefs of the Maoris of New Zealand Religions of the World

  18. Over two-thirds of the world’s population belong to Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, or Buddhism. Christianity is the single largest world religion.

More Related